People Tree: fighting for fair fashion

What do slavery, smoking in restaurants and eggs from caged hens all have in common? Answer: all were once commonplace; all were eventually banned; and none of us can quite get our heads round the fact they ever existed in the first place.

One day, says the Soil Association's Peter Melchett, it will be the same for ethical fashion. It too will become — indeed it must become — the norm.

The Simple Things is at People Tree's Rag Rage event in the aptly-named Fashion Street in Spitalfields. It's an evening of discussion and short films intended to keep the need for change at the forefront of the media's minds, six months after the devastating garment factory collapse at Rana Plaza in Bangladesh in which 1129 people died and another 2500 were injured.

Melchett's fellow guest speaker Liz Jones is visibly moved as she talks about her own visit to the "hell" of a Dhaka sweatshop. She is vehement that legislation is the answer; the average British woman shopper, she says, is not encouraged to invest in good quality, ethically-made clothes and will not simply yield her right to a £2 T-shirt. It was not always thus, she says ruefully: "I still wear a pair of trousers from 1996," she says. "My mother owned one handbag. Where did this mania for loads of stuff come from?"

People Tree founder Safia Minney, whose ethical fashion brand has grown 23% in the past year — partly, she says, due to both trade and individual buyers' revulsion at big business — shares her own horror stories of workers' suffering in the name of our throwaway clobber. But a boycott is not the answer, she replies to one question from the audience. The trade unions don't want us to boycott the 'bad' brands, but to force them to give their workers more money and basic rights.

Finally, fluorescent-haired design legend Zandra Rhodes says she wishes The Archers would run a storyline about organic cotton. After all, she says, the show is renowned for introducing environmental issues to a mainstream audience. It's clearly an off-the-cuff idea, and everyone chuckles, but then Peter Melchett chips in. He knows the show's farming adviser well. He will have a word with him.

And suddenly the dream seems a step closer — first we take Ambridge; then we take the world.

Reclaim the weekend!

Editor's letter. Issue 14, September 2013. “The snake in our digital garden of Eden has been hyper-connectivity with technology” Arianna Huffington

No mobile phone, no email, no Twitter, no Facebook, no Google this weekend. How does that make you feel? Are you instantly coming up with excuses as to why it would be a great idea in theory, but actually I need to check this and I couldn’t relax without knowing that? Me too. I find it an amusing irony that we now have to be given permission to turn off our digital devices and go on an official digital detox retreat before we can switch off guilt-free.

Many people are beginning to question the pressurised world we have created for ourselves. At the end of July Arianna Huffington, president and editor-in-chief of The Huffington Post, chaired their first women’s conference, ‘The Third Metric: Redefining Success Beyond Money and Power’.* As Arianna says, “It’s time for a third metric – one founded on wellbeing, wisdom, our ability to wonder, and to give back. The motivation for these events is that it has become increasingly clear that the current model, in which success is equated with overwork, burnout, sleep deprivation, never seeing your family, being connected through email 24 hours a day and exhaustion, isn’t working. It’s not working for women. It’s not working for men. It’s not working for companies, for any societies in which it’s dominant or for the planet… It’s no longer sustainable for human beings or for societies. To live the lives we want, and not just the ones we settle for, the ones society defines as successful, we need to include the third metric.”

One of the panellists was Mark Williams, whose book Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Finding Peace in a Frantic World claims that “more happiness and joy are attainable with even tiny changes to the way you live your life”. Another interesting book, Get Some Headspace by Andy Puddicombe, demystifies mindfulness through his accessible writing and presenting style and the website he co-founded, Headspace.

So take some time out this weekend, disconnect if you feel the need to, find a comfortable place to relax and lose yourself in the magazine, and when you do connect again make sure it’s at your own pace.

Jane

Jane Toft, Editor-in-chief

* Listen to Arianna Huffington’s inspirational Smith College commencement speech about The Third Metric.

Win a cosy winter break with New Forest Living and The Simple Things

Relax, recharge, unwind. Spend a long weekend in a forest hideaway, Hunters Moon cottage in Godshill is the perfect setting for a weekend getaway...

As the summer holiday season draws to a close we’re already dreaming of winter breaks in unspoilt countryside: watching the sun rise across misty fields, warming our toes in front of an open fire. So we’ve teamed up with New Forest Living to give you a chance to win a three night weekend break in a rural idyll.*

Click here to enter now before 30th September 2013!

* The prize is a three-night self-catering weekend break at Hunters Moon cottage in Godshill (from Friday to Monday, accommodation only) for four people plus one dog, worth up to £775. The break must be booked before 14th October 2013 and taken between 1st November 2013 and 3rd February 2014 (excluding Christmas, New Year, school holidays and bank holidays), and is subject to availability.

To book a relaxing break call 0845 680 0173 or visit www.newforestliving.co.uk